“Any intelligent fool can make things bigger and more complex… It takes a touch of genius—and a lot of courage—to move in the opposite direction.” — E.F. Schumacher
When Complexity Isn’t the Problem—It’s the Reality
Some organizations grow with intention. Others grow out of necessity. But regardless of how you scale, one thing becomes inevitable: complexity.
- Multiple entities.
- Multi-layered allocations.
- Distributed contributors.
- Inventory that moves.
- Fixed assets that depreciate.
- Departments with their own assumptions, cycles, and needs.
The truth? Complexity isn’t a problem—it’s your operating environment.
The real problem is whether your budgeting solution can handle it.
More Moving Parts = More Friction (If You’re Not Set Up Right)
You know the signs:
- Consolidations take days instead of minutes
- Your team spends more time managing the system than managing the business
- Contributors avoid the platform and revert to spreadsheets
- You’re running duplicate data entry just to reconcile across entities
- Allocations require complex manual workarounds
- You’re still asking: “There has to be an easier way, right?”
And here’s the uncomfortable truth:
Sometimes it’s not the tool—it’s how it was implemented.
When a Standard Implementation Isn’t Enough
Most budgeting systems come out of the box with “best practices.” That’s great—until you try applying them to a structure that’s anything but standard.
Your business is unique. Your reporting needs are layered. Your operational model demands flexibility.
And yet…
Too many budgeting tools are implemented with a copy-paste approach—configured quickly, deployed broadly, and left behind without optimization.
What Happens When You Outgrow the Way It Was Built
Even strong systems begin to break when:
- They weren’t aligned to your business model from the start
- They were built for what you needed “then,” not what you need now
- They’re filled with inefficient workflows, confusing setups, or rigid architecture
That’s when budgeting becomes a burden instead of a tool.
That’s when forecasting feels like a guessing game.
That’s when you realize—you might have the right software, but the wrong foundation.
Implementation Isn’t Just a Checklist—It’s an Art
We’ve seen this story again and again. Companies invest in powerful platforms, only to find that they’re:
- Not optimized for multi-entity structure
- Missing logic for asset depreciation or dynamic allocations
- Over-engineered in some areas, underbuilt in others
- Lacking automation where it’s needed most
This isn’t a reflection of your team’s ability—it’s a reflection of a rushed or misaligned rollout.
Great implementation is more than technical setup.
It’s about understanding how you think. How you operate.
Where the friction lives—and how to remove it.
Reimplement, Reimagine, Reclaim Performance
At RKL, we specialize in reimplementation and cleanup.
Not because we love rework—but because we know there’s often gold hiding behind the inefficiencies.
Your system can do more. Your team deserves better.
And you shouldn’t have to settle for “good enough” when there’s a better way.
Let’s Rethink Complexity Together
If your budgeting system is starting to feel like the problem—not the solution—it might be time to step back and ask:
- Was it built for how your business actually operates today?
- Are your allocations, assets, and contributors managed the smartest way possible?
- Is your team working around the system—or with it?
- Do you feel like you’ve truly unlocked the full power of your investment?
Because if you’re still saying, “There has to be an easier way…”
There is.
Connect with me on LinkedIn, or contact me— Let’s rebuild it—this time, the right way.